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Vesselin Kourtev -- www.kourtev.com In order to be able to fully comprehend and analyze Mr. Kourtev’s paintings we need to know about his past. Where he comes from and what traditions and values govern his life. He was born in Bulgaria, an ancient country with a very rich cultural-historical heritage – from the fascinating gold work of the Thracians through the unique Roman architecture to the Byzantine mosaics and paintings. I have know Vesselin Kourtev since he was a student and as his teacher I know how thoroughly and responsibly he was accumulating knowledge, learning the subtleties of the profession, preparing for his independent art work. After his graduation he showed enviable activity which is reflected by his lengthy portfolio.
A lot more can be said about V. Kourtev’s creative work but it is more important that the appreciators themselves, live the moment for themselves and I hope they find the painting that is closest to their heart and environment. I strongly believe that the prestigious Agoura Gallery has made an excellent choice by inviting an authentic and gifted author such as Mr. Kourtev. I wish the gallery and the author mutual success and successful collaboration. Prof. Ivan Botchev, Dean, Art Department, St. St. Cyril and Methodeous University, Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria
Green Wave - "The Fish Are Praying For Rain" Cycle
Biography
Vesselin Kourtev's Painterly Evocations of Natural Unity
One was also tempted to make comparisons to the Scottish "skyscapes" of the late James Schuyler, given that most of the canvases in Kourtev's recent exhibition at Agora Gallery, 530 West 25th street, evoked low-lying horizons and land masses topped by magnificent cloud masses. Then, on closer inspection of the paintings, mysterious figures began to emerge from those luminous cumulous fool-the-eye shapes in the sky. And suddenly one realized that Vesselin Kourtev is a unique neo-symbolist in abstract disguise, a romantic in the tradition of artists such as Arnold Bocklin, who envisioned the forces of war massing in the sky over Dusseldorf, or the Pre-Raphaelite painter Walter Crane, best known for his fanciful merger of myth and seascape "The Horses of Neptune." A significant difference between Kourtev and these earlier artists, however, is that Kourtev's style is informed by the gestural freedom of Abstract Expressionism, making his synthesis of figure and pure form appear more subtle and organic. Rather than being obvious imaginative anomalies, grafted onto nature for symbolic effect, they inhabit the scene as comfortably as the clouds themselves, growing out of a seamlessly unified aesthetic vision, in which no element appears less real or convincing than any other. In Kourtev's painting "Common Origins," for example, human and animal figures appear to be materializing out of an explosion of sunlight and are one with the land and the vibrant blue river that flows through it, expressing the unity of all creatures and things in nature, regardless of whether one conceives of our origins in spiritual/religious or secular/scientific terms. This unity is a constant theme in Kourtev's works, expressed as much through the compositional balances and color harmonies he achieves in his compositions as through the suggestiveness of his subject matter. Which is to say, that the abstract elements in his canvases are as convincing as the visual metaphors he creates is what makes the paintings of Vesselin Kourtev succeed on several levels simultaneously. This is especially impressive, given that modern art theorists tend all too often to place purely plastic values and symbolic ones in direct opposition to each other. Kourtev, however, proves that these different values can enhance rather than dilute each other, and this is a formidable achievement indeed. Maurice Taplinger
ARTis Spectrum, The Chelsea Perspective, Vol. 16, October 2006
"A Tale of Sheherazad" gives a modern vantage point to the tale about the murderous king who intends to kill his bride on their wedding night. Sheherazad saves her life by telling him a tale that lasts a thousand and one nights, thereby winning his heart. Though Kourtev uses watercolor and pencil in this work, he creates the illusion of a collage loosely held together. Each character in the story occupies a different section of the collage, disconnected from the other. This truncation creates a mood of isolation and strange loneliness within the painting. The King and Sheherazad eye each other from their separate patches of color, illustrating the tenuous nature of their relationship before Sheherazade has won back her life. Vesselin Kourtev is originally from Bulgaria. He obtained his degree at the University of Veliko Turnovo in Fine Arts in 1985. His work has been widely exhibited throughout Eastern and Western Europe and in the U.S. He currently lives in New Jersey.
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